Only 29% Of Fashion Mag Cover Models Were Non-White In 2016: Diversity Report

The Fashion Spot’s yearly diversity report on high fashion magazines has arrived, and despite an increase of 6.2 per cent from 2015, the percentage of non-white models fronting the world’s top fashion mags sat at only 29 per cent.

The study looked at 679 cover model appearances across 48 top international fashion publications, and covered issues from race to size and age, looking in particular at the likes of Vogue and Harper’s BAZAAR.

There were also a number of magazines that featured white models exclusively (whether on purpose or not is uncertain), and these mags included Vogue Germany, Vogue Netherlands, Vogue Russia, Harper’s Bazaar US, Porter, and LOVE, which for context hasn’t featured a single non-white model in the past three years of its quarterly publication.

Looking at the topic of plus size models, out of the year’s 679 cover model appearances, a sorry six (or 0.9 per cent) belonged to women size 12 and above.

Ashley Graham appeared on Cosmopolitan’s August cover in the US, while Adele graced the cover of Vanity Fair’s December issue and American Vogue’s March edition, and Leslie Jones and Melissa McCarthy covered ELLE’s July issue, the same month Aussie star Rebel Wilson fronted Marie Claire UK.

Interestingly, as Fusion writer Marisa Kabas pointed out, Wilson’s cover was less a celebration of her size, with her figure barely visible under sweeping hair and long sleeves. It’s also worth mentioning that Marie Claire U.K. booked no nonwhite cover models in 2016.

Transgender models were the least represented group, accounting for 0.7 per cent of all cover bookings, and with four of the five total appearances belonging to It model and Transparent star Hari Nef.

Marie Claire Spain named transgender model Andreja Pejic its Model of the Year, honouring her transition with a cover in March, and Indie glossy LADYGUNN celebrated Laverne Cox on its Fall/Winter issue.

In the age stakes, women aged 50 and over graced the covers of popular fashion publications 34 times in 2016, accounting for five per cent of all bookings.

Vanity Fair’s comprehensive Hollywood Issue, for which Diane Keaton, Helen Mirren, Viola Davis, Charlotte Rampling and Jane Fonda all posed, helped this issue immensely, W’s Royals cover portfolio featured the likes of Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jodie Foster and Halle Berry. It also gave a solo cover to Barbara Streisand in December.

Older models of colour were not forgotten, either. Michelle Obama rocked the covers of T Magazine’s The Greats Issue, InStyle’s October edition and Vogue US’s final issue of the year. In addition to Vanity Fair, Viola Davis covered ELLE US February 2016 Women in TV Issue, where she appeared alongside Louis-Dreyfus, Priyanka Chopra, Taraji P. Henson and Olivia Wilde.

It’s worth noting, however, that as with a lot of transgender models on magazine covers, the minority is grouped together with majority faces. For example, older models lumped in with stacks of young faces, and transgender posing with cisgender models.

To round it out, the most in-demand models of the year according to The Fashion Spot included primarily white, young faces, with the ‘Insta-girl’ the new It Girl for 2016.

Gigi Hadid has fronted more covers than any other model, nabbing 14 credits in total over the past 12 months, including no less than eight international Vogue editions.

Source: The Fashion Spot

Kendall Jenner landed 10 cover appearances, making her the second most coveted cover girl of 2016, followed by Gigi’s sister Bella Hadid, who fronted nine high-profile glossies.

LogIn

Signing in with LinkedIn

Please wait while we sign you in with LinkedIn.

This may take some time.

Please be patient and do not refresh the page.

(A new window from LinkedIn should open for you to authorize the B&T login. If you don't see this please check behind this window, and if it is still not there check your browser settings and turn off the pop-up blocker.)